Jello Biafra Loses Bid To Deny
Royalties to Former MatesA panel sends the matter of the group's dissolution
back down, but finds for Biafra's three opponents in all else.

By Tyler Cunningham

SAN FRANCISCO - The rebellious racket
recorded on such albums as "Fresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables"
belongs to the punks who made it, not to the lead singer's record label,
an appeals court said Wednesday.

Weighing in on the long and complex
legal battle between the seminal 1980s punk band Dead Kennedys and its
lead singer, Jello Biafra, the 1st District Court of Appeal substantially
upheld San Francisco Superior Court Judge Anne Bouliane.

The court said Bouliane was right
to hit Biafra with a $220,000 verdict for breach of contract and fraud.
She also was right to determine that the group's creative output - including
songs such as "Holiday in Cambodia" and "Kill the Poor"
- belongs to a partnership among the four band members.

But the justices reversed Bouliane's
decision to break up the band, remanding the case to the trial court to
determine whether a partnership among the punks should be dissolved and
its assets sold.

"The record demonstrates that
Biafra's fraudulent actions precipitated the rift in the partnership and
made it impossible for the partnership to carry on its business as it
had in the past," Justice Maria P. Rivera wrote for the court. She
was joined by Justices Timothy A. Reardon and Patricia K. Sepulveda. Dead
Kennedys v. Biafra, A094272

David Given, a lawyer with Phillips
& Erlewine in San Francisco who represented the three band members,
said the opinion was a complete victory for his clients. "The Court
of Appeal confirmed exactly what we wanted and what we said all along,"
he said. "There's only one bad guy in this."

Paul Keating, a lawyer with Carroll
Burdick & McDonough who represented Jello Biafra, could not be reached
for comment Wednesday.

The Dead Kennedys formed in San Francisco
in 1978 and quickly developed a reputation for shocking and satiric lyrics.
The band separated in 1986.

Their legal problems arose in 1998,
when three former band members sued lead singer Jello Biafra, whose real
name is Eric Reed Boucher. The three band members claimed that Biafra
didn't properly promote the group's albums and wrongfully exploited their
collective intellectual property through his own record label.

Biafra answered that he had exclusive
rights to the catalog. He also cross-complained, seeking the dissolution
of Decay Music, a general partnership the four band members formed in
1981 to publish records, retain rights to the music and collect income
from royalties.

After a concurrent jury and court
trial, Bouliane found that the individual band members who participated
in the recording projects owned the recordings, subject to a written 1991
agreement granting an exclusive license to Decay Music. She also ordered
that Decay Music dissolve, based on antagonistic feelings among the band
members, and sell the rights to the music catalog.

The court rejected Biafra's claims
that the partnership agreement did not establish the parties' ownership
interest in the music; that it did not transfer the copyright interest
in the band's works to Decay Music; and that the band's claims for unpaid
royalties were barred by the statute of limitations.

The justices also reversed a $5,000
fraud verdict against guitarist East Bay Ray.

The panel also reversed Bouliane's
order forcing the band to dissolve Decay Music and sell the catalog. The
appeals court said that it's uncertain whether the value of the catalog
would be diminished if its sale were forced and remanded the case to the
trial judge to answer that question.

The bandmates prefer to maintain rights
to the recordings, Given said. He anticipates no changes in the way Dead
Kennedys works are sold and marketed, and said Biafra will remain a full
partner with rights to vote on such matters.

He even left open the possibility
that the foursome might, someday, make music again. "Never say never,"
he said.